Integrated science.
Innovative technology.
This is the Crump Institute.

The Crump Institute for Molecular Imaging brings together faculty, students, and staff with a variety of backgrounds - physics, mathematics, engineering, biology, chemistry, and medicine - to pursue innovative technologies and science to accelerate our understanding of biology and medicine. Innovative technology programs, linked by systems biology, microfluidics, nanotechnology, and molecular imaging, provide the tools to conduct integrated science in a unique, interdisciplinary setting. With an initial focus on cancer and immunity, our goal is to develop new technologies to observe, measure, and understand biology in cells, tissues, and living organisms. Through molecular imaging - taking pictures of the living chemistry of cells and tissues of the body, we can watch biology in action in living organisms. The Crump Institute's ultimate objective is to provide medicine with new science and technologies to judge the state of health, and identify the early transitions to disease for the development and use of new therapies as part of the new era in molecular medicine.

Read more about "Our Vision"

 

 

Events

November 23, 4:00  PM

Harvey Herschman, PhD, UCLA - Crump/JCCC Seminar Series "Mouse Models, COX-2, and Cancer"
 

December 2, 12:00  PM

Gerald Crabtree, PhD, Stanford University, "Understanding the Words of Chromatin Remodeling"
 

December 9, 12:00  PM

Jared Diamond, PhD, UCLA, "Honor or abandon: why does treatment of the elderly vary so widely among human societies?"
 

December 14, 4:00  PM

Ramsey D Badawi, PhD, UC Davis Crump/JCCC Seminar Series
 

January 11, 4:00  PM

Klavs Jensen, PhD, MIT, Crump/JCCC Seminar Series
 

News

UCLA Scholars in Oncologic Molecular Imaging (SOMI) postdoctoral training program funding is renewed

 

Crump Institute scientists develop 'crystal ball' for personalized cancer treatment

 

Crump Institute researchers receive major stem cell grants

 

Caught in the Act

 

Dr. Hsian-Rong Tseng Among Team of Caltech/UCLA Chemists Who Have Created Memory Circuit with the Size of a Human White Blood Cell

 
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